They're harvesting yellow-tail kingfish off the coast of Geraldton; lime growers value-add their fruit; we check out the latest milkers in the Bega Valley; and Indonesian students get hands-on experience on Pigeon Hole Station.

This week fabulous fungi in the Tarkine wilderness; Fish Creek hosts a tea cosy festival; Nathan Griggs makes a monster whip for a world record attempt; and success for an indigenous working scheme in the Kimberley.

This week baiting for foxes in the Burrup Peninsula; we fly in to Tibooburra for a flying doctor clinic; meet a cute whip-wielding toddler; and go behind the chutes for the poddy calf ride at Kununurra.

Forget your modern satellite-positioning systems, an old-fashioned magnetic compass is keeping us on course; Kym Masters works in corporate finance but his real love is cheese; and we collect sheep ear tags.

Native angasi oysters are about to be commercially harvested in Tasmania; an Alice Springs bush block is turned into a little bit of paradise; music helps keep the RFDS flying; and we go to cheese school.

Afghan refugees are happy to call Shepparton home; we're going nuts for pistachios; and join a wild dog patrol in the territory. We also visit Billabong Sanctuary where baby crocs are being given a helping hand.

We're on the hunt for the endangered grey crowned babbler; peak inside a customised horse float; and meet a couple of campdrafters, one's a rising 16-year-old champion, the other still competes well into his 80s.

Donated hay brings hope to drought stricken properties; School of the Air students enjoy some 'together time' in outback NSW; a Burnie cafe feeds hungry firefighters; and volunteers harvest grapes at Wagga.

A sniffer dog helps save tiny pygmy possums; we meet two pet camels; and see how buffalos can revive a family's dairy farm. We also visit a sustainable property near Tamworth where rainbow trout is on the menu.

In the last in this summer series of Rural Reporter we visit a prison farm in WA; Barellan barley growers brew their own beer; we feed the animals at the Dubbo zoo; and dress up for a wild west shootout in Broken Hill.

In this summer series of Rural Reporter we go mustering in the Northern Territory; Tasmanian women learn the art of fencing; orphaned joeys find a loving new home; and we meet an unsung hero of the Gracemere saleyards.